
Or the player who achieves a passive cash flow of US$ 50,000 wins the game.Įach player has to choose a color and profession card from the deck – it can be Engineer, Surgeon, Airline Pilot, Janitor etc. The player who gets out of the rat race, moves on to the fast track and buys his dream wins the game. Tallying the income statement after every roll of dice is time consuming too.Įach player has to choose a dream from the fast track. It takes time to learn the rules of the games. When I played it for the first time with two others, nobody could get out of the rat race in 3 hours. If three players are playing for the first time, it may take 3 or 4. Too many people trying to learn the game at the same time can be very time consuming. This is especially useful when you are playing for the first few times. But I would recommend that you limit the number of players to three or four. The material supplied can support up to five or six players. Please have some good quality pencils, a sharpener, an eraser and a calculator by hand before starting. You advance your coin along the track as per the number that appears on the dice But as per the instructions of the cards you draw you can roll more than one or you may loose one or more chances. The fast track has dreams and opportunities in the cells. The details of the eventsĪre given in the manual. It could be a paycheck, opportunity, market, doodad, charity, baby or down sizing. The tracks are made up of cells like any other board game. It has two tracks - the circular rat race track and the fast track. Here is the sequence I suggest: Cashflow 101 Boardgame, Cashflow 101 Egame and then Cashflow 202 Egame.

I learned a lot by tallying my income statement manually.

But I would recommend playing the board game first before moving on to the E-Game. E-Game versions are cheaper and definitely quicker. It took some time before we could play it without looking up the rules over and over again.Į-Game Versions of 101 and 202. It looked very tedious in the beginning, especially the financial recording after each roll of dice.

We met up at the residence of the owner of the board game and started playing. I can’t remember how it happened anyway I got in touch with a gentleman who knew someone with the game. So I started searching around for someone who had it and lived nearby. I was not able to afford one of my own then. The book Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki described this game and its benefits. I first heard of Cashflow 101 when I was in living in Bombay, India.
